1.
Grimshaw, A. & Hart, K. Anthropology and the Crisis of the Intellectuals. Critique of Anthropology’ 14, (1994).
2.
Lorenzo Brutti. Where Anthropologists Fear to Tread. Notes and Queries on Anthropology and Consultancy, Inspired by a Fieldwork Experience. Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice 45, 94–107 (2001).
3.
Scheper-Hughes, N. The Primacy of the Ethical: Propositions for a Militant Anthropology. Current Anthropology 36, (1995).
4.
Hale, C. R. Activist Research v. Cultural Critique: Indigenous Land Rights and the Contradictions of Politically Engaged Anthropology. Cultural Anthropology 21, 96–120 (2006).
5.
Holmes, D. R. & Marcus, G. E. Collaboration Today and the Re‐Imagination of the Classic Scene of Fieldwork Encounter. (2008).
6.
Peirano, M. G. S. When Anthropology is at Home: The Different Contexts of a Single Discipline. Annual Review of Anthropology 27, 105–128 (1998).
7.
Jackson, A. Anthropology at Home. vol. A.S.A. monographs (Tavistock Publications, London, 1987).
8.
Bennett, J. W. Applied and Action Anthropology: Ideological and Conceptual Aspects. Current Anthropology 37, (1996).
9.
Luke Eric Lassiter. Collaborative Ethnography and Public Anthropology. Current Anthropology 46, 83–106 (2005).
10.
Eriksen, T. H. Engaging Anthropology: The Case for a Public Presence. (Berg, Oxford, 2006).
11.
Peter Pels. Professions of Duplexity. Current Anthropology 40, 101–136 (1999).
12.
Sillitoe, P. Anthropologists only need apply: challenges of applied anthropology. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 13, 147–165 (2007).
13.
ZERO ANTHROPOLOGY | Maximilian Forte. http://zeroanthropology.net/author/openanthropology/.
14.
Eriksen, T. H. A Brief History of Anthropology. in Small Places, Large  Issues: an Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology (1998).
15.
Marcus, G. E. & Fischer, M. M. J. Anthropology as Cultural Critique: An Experimental Moment in the Human Sciences. (University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1999).
16.
Andrew Strathern and Pamela J. Stewart. Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice. 45,.
17.
MacClancy, J. THE LITERARY IMAGE OF ANTHROPOLOGISTS*. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 11, 549–575 (2005).
18.
Deleuze, G. Postscript on the Societies of Control. (1992).
19.
Diefenbach, T. & Sillince, J. A. A. Formal and Informal Hierarchy in Different Types of Organization. Organization Studies 32, 1515–1537 (2011).
20.
Wright, S. ‘Culture’ in Anthropology and Organizational Studies. in Anthropology of Organizations (1994).
21.
Castells, M. The Rise of the Network Society. vol. The information age : economy, society, and culture (Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, 2010).
22.
Foucault, M. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. (Vintage Books, New York, 1995).
23.
Erving Goffman. Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates. (Anchor).
24.
Handy, C. The Virtual Organization. in Organization Theory: Selected Readings (1997).
25.
Bruno Latour. Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory. (Oxford University Press, USA).
26.
Taylor, F. W. Scientific Management. in Organization Theory: Selected Readings (1997).
27.
Tönnies, F. & Loomis, C. P. Community and Association: Gemeinschaft Und Gesellschaft. vol. International library of sociology and social reconstruction (London) (Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1955).
28.
Strathern, M. Audit Cultures: Anthropological Studies in Accountability, Ethics and the Academy. vol. European Association of Social Anthropologists (Routledge, London, 2000).
29.
Georgina Born. Rationalizing Culture: IRCAM, Boulez, and the Institutionalization of the Musical Avant-Garde. (University of California Press, Berkeley, 1995).
30.
Georgina Born. Uncertain Vision: Birt, Dyke and the Reinvention of the BBC. (Vintage Books).
31.
Coleman, G. Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous. (Verso, London, 2014).
32.
Christina Garsten. Apple World: Core and Periphery in a Transnational Organizational Culture. (Dept. of Social Anthropology, Stockholm University, Stockholm, 1994).
33.
Richard Harper. Inside the IMF: An Ethnography of Documents, Technology and Organisational Action. (Academic Press, San Diego, 1998).
34.
Kondo, D. K. Crafting Selves: Power, Gender, and Discourses of Identity in a Japanese Workplace. (University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1990).
35.
Jakob Krause-Jensen. Flexible Firm: The Design of Culture at Bang & Olufsen. (Berghahn Books (March 1, 2013)).
36.
Gideon Kunda. Engineering Culture: Control and Commitment in a High-Tech Corporation. (Temple University Press).
37.
Mosse, D. Cultivating Development: An Ethnography of Aid Policy and Practice. vol. Anthropology, culture, and society (Pluto Press, London, 2005).
38.
Peacock, V. We, the Max Planck Society: A Study of Hierarchy in Germany. (London: Department of Anthropology, University College London, 2013).
39.
Riles, A. The Network inside Out. (University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, 2001).
40.
Mitchell Sedgwick. Globalisation and Japanese Organisational Culture: An Ethnography of a Japanese Corporation in France (Japan Anthropology Workshop). (Routledge (February 17, 2008)).
41.
Young, Malcolm. An Inside Job: Policing and Police Culture in Britain. (Clarendon Press, Oxford [England], 1991).
42.
Caitlin Zaloom. Out of the Pits: Traders and Technology from Chicago to London. (University Of Chicago Press; 1 edition (October 15, 2010)).
43.
Castells, M. The Net and the Self: Working notes for a critical theory of the informational society. Critique of Anthropology 16, 9–38 (1996).
44.
Hakken, D. Computing and Social Change: New Technology and Workplace Transformation, 1980-1990. Annual Review of Anthropology 22, 107–132 (1993).
45.
Malaby, T. Making Virtual Worlds: Linden Lab and Second Life- Introduction. (2009).
46.
Malaby, T. Making Virtual Worlds: Linden Lab and Second Life- Chapter 4. (2009).
47.
Wittel, A. Toward a Network Sociality. Theory, Culture & Society 18, 51–76 (2001).
48.
Axel, B. K. Anthropology and the New Technologies of Communication. Cultural Anthropology 21, 354–384 (2006).
49.
Between Craft and Science: Technical Work in the United States. (IRL Press, Ithaca, N.Y, 1997).
50.
Boyer, D. Digital Expertise in Online Journalism (and Anthropology). (2010).
51.
Brown, J. S. & Duguid, P. The Social Life of Information. (Harvard Business School Press, Boston, Mass, 2002).
52.
Christen, K. Access and Accountability: The Ecology of Information Sharing in the Digital Age. Anthropology News 50, 4–5 (2009).
53.
Drazin, A. Design Anthropology: Working on, with and for Digital Technologies. in Digital Anthropology (2013).
54.
Downey, G. Virtual Webs, Physical Technologies, and Hidden Workers: The Spaces of Labor in Information Internetworks. Technology and Culture 42, 209–235 (2001).
55.
Freeman, C. High Tech and High Heels in the Global Economy: Women, Work, and Pink-Collar Identities in the Caribbean. (Duke University Press, Durham [N.C.], 2000).
56.
Hakken, D. Resocialing work? Anticipatory anthropology of the labor process. Futures 32, 767–775 (2000).
57.
Henderson, K. Flexible Sketches and Inflexible Data Bases: Visual Communication, Conscription Devices, and Boundary Objects in Design Engineering. Science, Technology & Human Values 16, 448–473 (1991).
58.
Kallinikos, J. Representing Organization: Knowledge, Management, and the Information Age. Information Technology & People 19, 390–393 (2006).
59.
Knox, H., O’Doherty, D., Vurdubakis, T. & Westrup, C. Transformative capacity, information technology, and the making of business ‘experts’. The Sociological Review 55, 22–41 (2007).
60.
Martin, E. Flexible Bodies: Tracking Immunity in American Culture from the Days of Polio to the Age of AIDS. (Beacon Press, Boston, 1994).
61.
Susana Narotzky. New Directions in Economic Anthropology. (Pluto Press, London, 1997).
62.
Orr, J. E. Talking about Machines: An Ethnography of a Modern Job. vol. Collection on technology and work (ILR Press, Ithaca, NY, 1996).
63.
Orlikowski, W. J. The Duality of Technology: Rethinking the Concept of Technology in Organizations. Organization Science 3, 398–427 (1992).
64.
Ross, A. No-Collar: The Humane Workplace and Its Hidden Costs. (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, PA, 2004).
65.
Sennett, R. The Corrosion of Character: The Personal Consequences of Work in the New Capitalism. (W. W. Norton, New York, 1998).
66.
Shore, C. & Wright, S. Coercive Accountability: The Rise in Audit Culture in Higher Education. in Audit Cultures: Anthropological Studies in Accountability, Ethics and the Academy (2000).
67.
Turner, V. W. Are there universals of performance in myth, ritual and drama? in By means of performance: intercultural studies of theatre and ritual 8–18 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990).
68.
Schieffelin, E. On failure and performance: Throwing the medium out of the seance. in The performance of healing 59–89 (Routledge, New York, 1996).
69.
Holbraad, M. & Scherer, D. On Work In The Theatre.
70.
Wagner, R. The Invention of Culture. (University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1981).
71.
Gell, A. Art and Agency: An Anthropological Theory. (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1998).
72.
Bateson, G. Steps to an Ecology of Mind. (University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2000).
73.
Barba, E. The Paper Canoe: A Guide to Theatre Anthropology. (Routledge, Abingdon, 1995).
74.
Bauman, R. Story, Performance and Event: Contextual Studies of Oral Narrative. vol. Cambridge studies in oral and literate culture (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1986).
75.
Beeman, W. O. The Anthropology of Theater and Spectacle. Annual Review of Anthropology 22, 369–393 (1993).
76.
Hastrup, K. Theatre as a site of passage: some reflections on the magic of acting. in Ritual, Performance, Media (1998).
77.
Hymes, D. Breakthrough into performance : folklore performance and communication. in Folklore : performance and communication (1975).
78.
Goffman, E. & Berger, B. M. Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. (Northeastern University Press, Boston, 1986).
79.
Jerzy Grotowski. Towards a Poor Theatre. (Routledge, New York, 2002).
80.
Sneath, D., Holbraad, M. & Pedersen, M. A. Technologies of the Imagination: An Introduction. Ethnos 74, 5–30 (2009).
81.
David Mamet. True and False. (Vintage).
82.
Schechner, R. Between Theater & Anthropology. (University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1985).
83.
Stanislavsky, K. & Hapgood, E. R. An Actor Prepares. vol. Bloomsbury revelations (Bloomsbury Academic, London, UK, 2013).
84.
Strathern, Marilyn. The Self in Self-Decoration. Oceania 49,.
85.
Victor Witter Turner. From Ritual to Theatre: The Human Seriousness of Play. (Performing Arts Journal Publications, New York City, 1982).
86.
Wulf, H. Perspectives towards ballet performance: exploring, repairing and  maintaining frames. in Ritual, Performance, Media (1998).
87.
Toward a Definition of Performance Studies, Part I.
88.
Toward a Definition of Performance Studies, Part II.
89.
Wikipedia entry for ‘Chad–Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project’. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chad%E2%80%93Cameroon_Petroleum_Development_and_Pipeline_Project.
90.
Guyer, J. Briefing: The Chad-Cameroon Petroleum and Pipeline Development Project. (2002).
91.
Pegg, S. Briefing: Chronicle of a Death Foretold: The Collapse of the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline Project. African Affairs 108, 311–320 (2009).
92.
International Advisory Group - Chad-Cameroon Petroleum Development and Pipeline Project, Final Report. http://web.worldbank.org/archive/website01210/WEB/IMAGES/IAG_CHAD.PDF.
93.
Chad-Cameroon Development Project. Report No. 6, First Quarter 2002. (2002).
94.
Environmental Defense Fund.2002.The Chad-Cameroon Oil and Pipeline Project: a Call for Accountability. (2002).
95.
Goldman, L. & Baum, S. Introduction. in Social Impact Analysis: An Applied Anthropology Manual (2000).
96.
Howitt, R. & Jackson, S. Social impact assessment and linear projects. in Social Impact Analysis: An Applied Anthropology Manual (2000).
97.
Associaiton of Social Anthropologists (ASA) Ethics Guidelines - 2011.
98.
International Association for Impact Assessment (IAIA) Code of Ethics. http://www.iaia.org/publicdocuments/miscdocs/Code-of-Ethics.pdf?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1.
99.
American Anthropological Association (AAA) Code of Ethics - 2009.
100.
Guyer, J. I. Blueprints, Judgment, and Perseverance in a Corporate Context. Current Anthropology 52, S17–S27 (2011).
101.
Munoz, J. & Burnham, P. Subcontracting as Corporate Social Responsibility in the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline Project. in An Anthropology of Corporate Social Responsibility.
102.
Burnham, P. & Koppert, G. Mbere Bridge to Babongo Socio-Economic Impact Assessment. (2003).
103.
Koppert, G. Draft of the Socioeconomic Baseline and Monitoring Surveys in the Pipeline Corridor. (2003).
104.
Little, P. D. & Painter, M. Discourse, Politics, and the Development Process: Reflections on Escobar’s "Anthropology and the Development Encounter.
105.
Ferguson, J. Anthropology and its evil twin: "Development” in the constitution of a discipline. in International development and the social sciences: essays on the history and politics of knowledge (1997).
106.
Escobar, A. Anthropology and the Development Encounter: The Making and Marketing of Development Anthropology. (1991).
107.
Gow, D. D. Anthropology and development: evil twin or moral narrative.pdf. (2002).
108.
Catherine Coumans. Occupying spaces created by conflict: anthropologists, development NGOs, responsible investment, and mining. Current Anthropology 52, (2011).
109.
Edelman, M. Synergies and tensions between rural social movements and professional researchers. 2009.pdf. (2009).
110.
Escobar, A. Anthropology and development. International Social Science Journal 49, 497–515 (2010).
111.
Goldman, M. The Birth of a Discipline: Producing Authoritative Green Knowledge, World Bank-Style. Ethnography 2, 191–217 (2001).
112.
Goodale, M. Ethical Theory as Social Practice. American Anthropologist 108, 25–37 (2006).
113.
Nolan, R. W. Development Anthropology: Encounters in the Real World. (Westview Press, Boulder, CO, 2002).
114.
Pels, P. Global ‘experts’ and ‘African’ minds: Tanganyika anthropology as public and secret service, 1925-61. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 17, 788–810 (2011).
115.
Stewart, P. & And. Anthropology and Consultancy: Issues and Debates. (Berghahn Books).
116.
Miyazaki, H. Between arbitrage and speculation: an economy of belief and doubt. Economy and Society 36, 396–415 (2007).
117.
Holmes, D. R. & Marcus, G. E. Cultures of Expertise and the Management of Globalization: Toward the Re‐Functioning of Ethnography. in .), Global assemblages: Technology, politics, and ethics as anthropological problems (2005).
118.
Ho, K. Disciplining Investment Bankers, Disciplining the Economy: Wall Street’s Institutional Culture of Crisis and the Downsizing of "Corporate America”. American Anthropologist 111, 177–189 (2009).
119.
Riles, A. Collateral Expertise: Legal Knowledge in the Global Financial Markets. Current Anthropology 51, 795–818 (2010).
120.
Hertz, E. The Trading Crowd: An Ethnography of the Shanghai Stock Market. vol. Cambridge studies in social and cultural anthropology (Cambridge University Press, New York, 1998).
121.
Ho, K. Z. Liquidated: An Ethnography of Wall Street. (Duke University Press, Durham, 2009).
122.
Vincent Antonin Lépinay. Codes of Finance: Engineering Derivatives in a Global Bank. (Princeton University Press (December 7, 2014)).
123.
Maurer, B. Mutual Life, Limited: Islamic Banking, Alternative Currencies, Lateral Reason. (Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 2005).
124.
Caitlin Zaloom. Out of the Pits: Traders and Technology from Chicago to London. (University Of Chicago Press; 1 edition (October 15, 2010)).
125.
Annelise Riles. Collateral Knowledge: Legal Reasoning in the Global Financial Markets (Chicago Series in Law and Society). (University Of Chicago Press (May 1, 2011)).
126.
Hirokazu Miyazaki. Arbitraging Japan: Dreams of Capitalism at the End of Finance. (University of California Press, Berkeley, 2013).
127.
Maurer, B. The Anthropology of Money. Annual Review of Anthropology 35, 15–36 (2006).
128.
Ortiz, H. Financial value: Economic, moral, political, global. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory 3, (2013).
129.
Ortiz, H. The Limits of Financial Imagination: Free Investors, Efficient Markets, and Crisis. American Anthropologist 116, 38–50 (2014).
130.
Holmes, D. R. Economy of Words. Cultural Anthropology 24, 381–419 (2009).
131.
Chong, K. & Tuckett, D. Constructing conviction through action and narrative: how money managers manage uncertainty and the consequence for financial market functioning. Socio-Economic Review (2014) doi:10.1093/ser/mwu020.
132.
Janet Roitman. Anti-Crisis. (Duke University Press Books (November 20, 2013)).
133.
MacKenzie, D. A., Muniesa, F. & Siu, L. Do Economists Make Markets?: On the Performativity of Economics. (Princeton University Press, 2008).
134.
Callon, M. Market Devices. (Blackwell Pub., Malden, MA, 2007).
135.
Froud, J., Haslam, C., Johal, S. & Williams, K. Shareholder value and Financialization: consultancy promises, management moves. Economy and Society 29, 80–110 (2000).
136.
Zaloom, C. How to Read the Future: The Yield Curve, Affect, and Financial Prediction. Public Culture 21, 245–268 (2009).
137.
Leyshon, A. & Thrift, N. The Capitalization of Almost Everything: The Future of Finance and Capitalism. Theory, Culture & Society 24, 97–115 (2007).
138.
Mitchell, T. The work of economics: how a discipline makes its world. European Journal of Sociology 46, 297–320 (2005).
139.
Beunza, D. Tools of the trade: the socio-technology of arbitrage in a Wall Street trading room. Industrial and Corporate Change 13, 369–400 (2004).
140.
Guyer, J. I. Prophecy and the near future: Thoughts on macroeconomic, evangelical, and punctuated time. American Ethnologist 34, 409–421 (2007).
141.
Thrift, N. ‘It’s the romance, not the finance, that makes the business worth pursuing’: disclosing a new market culture. Economy and Society 30, 412–432 (2001).
142.
LiPuma, E. & Lee, B. Financial Derivatives and the Globalization of Risk. vol. Public planet books (Duke University Press, Durham [N.C.], 2004).
143.
Good, A. Cultural evidence in courts of law. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 14, S47–S60 (2008).
144.
Merry, S. E. Transnational Human Rights and Local Activism: Mapping the Middle. American Anthropologist 108, 38–51 (2006).
145.
Latour, B. War of the Worlds: What about Peace? (Prickly Paradigm Press, Chicago, 2002).
146.
Crewe, E. & Axelby, R. Human Rights and Cultural Fantasies. in Anthropology and Development: Culture, Morality and Politics in a Globalised World (2012).
147.
Thuen, T. Anthropological knowledge in the courtroom. Conflicting paradigms*. Social Anthropology 12, 265–287 (2007).
148.
Ludeke, J. C. Applying Anthropology to Courtroom Work. (1998).
149.
Morton, J. I-Witnessing the I-Witness: a Response to Ken Maddock on Courtly Truth and Native Title Anthropology. The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology 3, 89–97 (2002).
150.
Fitzpatrick, P. ‘The damned word’: Culture and Its (In)compatibility with Law. Law, Culture and the Humanities 1, 2–13 (2005).
151.
Morjaria, K. The ‘cultural mediator’: An Examination of the major problems encountered by cultural expert witnesses in providing evidence in transnational hindu adoption cases in the UK. (2013).
152.
Riles, A. Anthropology, Human Rights, and Legal Knowledge: Culture in the Iron Cage. American Anthropologist 108, 52–65 (2006).
153.
Schwander-Sievers, S. ’Culture’ in Court: Albanian Migrants and the Anthropologist as Expert Witness. in Applications of Anthropology: Professional Anthropology in the Twenty-first Century (2006).
154.
Good, A. Anthropologists as Expert Witnesses: Political Asylum Cases Involving Sri Lankan Tamils. in Human Rights in Global Perspective: Anthropological Studies of Rights, Claims and Entitlements (ASA Monographs) (2003).
155.
Good, A. Anthropologists as experts Asylum appeals in British courts. Anthropology Today 19, 3–7 (2003).
156.
Good, A. ‘Undoubtedly an expert’? Anthropologists in British asylum courts. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 10, 113–133 (2004).
157.
van Broeck, J. Cultural Defence and Culturally Motivated Crimes (Cultural Offences). European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice 9, 1–32 (2001).
158.
American Anthropologist- Anthropology and Human Rights in a New Key (March 2006 Vol108 Issue1). Volume 108,.
159.
Cowan, J. K., Dembour, M.-B. & Wilson, R. Culture and Rights: Anthropological Perspectives. (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2003).
160.
Cohen, R. Human Rights and Cultural Relativism: The Need for a New Approach. American Anthropologist 91, 1014–1017 (1989).
161.
Turner, T. Human Rights, Human Difference: Anthropology’s Contribution to an Emancipatory Cultural Politics. (1997).
162.
Levi-Strauss, C. Race and History. in Structural Anthropology Vol. 2 (1977).
163.
Bloch, M. Where did Anthropology go? Or, the need for human nature.
164.
Rapport, N. Manifesto: Towards a Literary and Liberal Appreciation of the Conscious and Creative Individual. in Transcendent individual: essays toward a literary and liberal anthropology (1997).
165.
Wagner, R. The Invention of Culture. (University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1981).
166.
MacClancy, J. THE LITERARY IMAGE OF ANTHROPOLOGISTS*. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 11, 549–575 (2005).